From the N. Y. Eve. Pest. itraTHER EROEIEMES coked - x=o BY THE WESTESN SAVAGES. To -day we publiA an account from a Missouri paper of certain rematka- . v ie proceedings which Were had lately Bt Parkvillo, in the northwestern part of Missouri. The violence and rob bery c ommitted, and the preparations for deliberate murder, from a fitting se quel to the late exploits of thstMis sourians in Kansas. Justice, like charity, should begin at home. It is not worth while to make 'a great outcry about wrongs committed on American citizens a broad,- while the civil authority fails to protect Ametican citizens from far g reater wrongs in their own country. If t he lives of our own countrymen are not safe here—if their person al liberty is not respected—if their property may be pillaged by a con bpiracy, and the plotters remain un punished and the outrage unredressed what face can we require other c ountries to abstain from treating in a like manner such of our countrymen as they may find on their soil? How can we ask them to respect rights -which we do not respect ourselves? They may turn upon us and say : "How is it that you demand a different meas ure of justice from that which you g i ve ? We have only treated your citizens more mildly and less arbitrari- lv than you treat them yourselves." There was, it seems, a newspaper published in Parkville, under the title • of the Industrial Luminary, which gave offence to Atchison's faction by the freedom with which it spoke of the recent election frauds in h.ansas, and expressed a desire, cherished by a very considerable party in Missouri, that Kansas should be a free state. The pro-slavery party assembled, passed resolutions that the press of the Parkvillo Luminary should be thrown into the Missouri river, that its two conductors, Messrs. Park and Pat tenioo, should be pitched after it, if they could be caught within the state ; that they should be followed and hangedif they attempted to settle in Kansas ; and that if any preacher of the Northern Methodist Church should off,r to preach in Platte County, he th,,uld" be tarred and feathered for the tint offence, and hanged for the sec- - nal The savages who were present executed the first of these threats im mediately, throwing the press into the river; the second is yet to be fulfilled, and the barrel of tar and bag of feath ers, with the halter, are doubtless reatv for the next Methodist who • preaches in the county. During the holding of the assembly it seems that the wires of the telegraph which pass es through the place were busy com municating despatches "of an encour nz:izing nature," doubtless from the leaders of the Atchison party, by whom outrages were instigated. Thus there is no- crime, no act of robbery or cruelty, not even murder at which these 'wretches are to Cop in the prosecution of their intent NDrevent Kansas from adopting a free c , .::,titution. All respect for law, for 1 . ::e principles of natural justice, for the dictates of humanity, for the usages (~ : *ciNilized life, is to be trampled un 1n,0t,. and nothing is to be held sa cred from outrage that interferes with their purpose. The acts of these plotters against the freedom of Kan !as. are the great national sins of the (:ay, and the foulest blot on the morals atil honor of the nation. In all the abominable acts of oppression commit ted by the despotisms of the old world, there is .nothing more tyrannical in !p;rit, and scarce anything so atroci ou*; brutal in act. It was a bard case, certainly, that Dr. Peck, an innocent man, according tr. , his own statement, should have been arre,ted by the Spanish authorities of i ha on suspicion of treasonable prac tices; it was hard, that after his re :ease he should not be allowed to re- Lle and mend teeth in the city of Puerto Principe, where all his ac quaintances lived: and we do not won der that he chose to leave the island rather than live any where else. He, vras not however, pitched into any of the rivers of Cuba, nor stripped of his .Property, nor threatened with being hanged by the neck if he did not leave the island immediately. The condi -I:nn affixed to his liberation, that he !huuld not continue to make his home in Puerto Principe, was not accom panied by the threat that if any others . E.f his countaymen should have the tardihood to visit Puerto Principe, ey should suffer an ignominious pun /Arne= for the first offence, and death in . r th e second. If the Spanish authori ties had behaved half as arbitrarily and atrociously iu his case as the organized Atchison faction Las done' in that of Park and Patterson, the whole country !Quid have been in a flame of indigna tlun, from the Mexican frontier to the Canadian. Let us attend to the worst cases first, and as these happen to be nearest to us, we can most conveniently give them our attention. When the rights of the American citizen are sacredly respect ed on the soil of his own country, our se nsitiveness for foreign insults will 'Ppear more natural and reasonable. 'We do not wish to degrade so grave a subje c t by any trivial allusion, but all civil governments should remember, M consulting for the safety of their sub- jects, that there 'is peat truthin. the old nursery rhyme ) If you would keep them safe abroad, T'tay keep them safe at home. • GRAND DIVISION S. er , quar terly session sof this body was held at Blairsville, Indiana county, in this State, commencing Wednesday, the 25th of April, which was attended by the grand officers from Philadelphia and Pittsburg, and a numerous repre sentation from Indiana, Blair, Hunt-, ingdon, and surrounding. counties. The meeting was characterized by harmony and unanimity of sentiment on the , part of the representatives, and the public proceedings cheered and encouraged by the presence of a large number of young ladies who had been initiated as "accepted visitors." From the reports presented by the Grand Scribe, the order was shown to be in a flourishing condition in the southern and eastern portions of the State, which was generally attributed to the admission of women, and the admirable working of the "degrees" recently adopted. A public procession came off on Thursday, in • which the ladies. par- - ticipated, proceeding to the English Lutherean church, where a very in teresting and instructive address was delivered by the G. S., Wm. Nichol son, of Philadelphia, and a beautiful piece (to the air of "Old Folks at Home") sung by the ladies, together' with other appropriate exercises—the only regrets expressed at - the conclu-• sion being, by the ladies, at the ab sence of the Grand Worthy Patriarch, who was detained by his official duties in the House of Representatives. The next Quarterly Session will be held at Scranton, Luzerne county, on the fourth Wednesday of July next.— Pittsburg Dispatch. NEW POET.-A correspondent sends us a small poem which' he says "he compozzed awl himself " One verse will do for a specimen : A spiral is a prate burd, Iss got a qurlie tale; lie stol awl me daddiz kora, An et it on a rael. t , In this Borough, on Monday the 7th instant Mrs. AD.ILINE WHITE, aged 31 years. Grneral Enformation. UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT. President—Frankliii Pierce Vice President—(de facto) Jesse D. Bright. Secretary of State—Wm. L. Marcy. Secretary of Interior—Robert McClelland. Secretary of Treasury—James Guthrie. Secretary of War—Jefferson Davis. Secretary of Nary—James C. Dobbin, Post Master General—James Campbell. Attorney General—Caleb Cushing. Chief Justice of United States—R. B. Taney STATE GOVERNMENT. . Gorernor—Janies Pollock. Secretary of Stat!—Andrew G. Curtin. Deputy Secretary of State—J. M. Sullivan. Surreyor General—J. Porter Brawley. Auditor General—Ephraim Banks. . Treasurer—Joseph Bailey. Supreme Court Judges—Ellis Lewis, W. B Lowrie, G. \V. NVoodward, J. C. Knox, J. S Black. • County Officers, with Post Office Address. President Judge, ROBERT G. WHITE, Wellsboro, Tioga Co Associate Judges, Oni.sc:l; A. LEWIS, Ulysses,. JOSEPH MANN, Mlllport. District Attorney, FRANKLIN W. KNOX, Coudersport. • Sheriff, PIERRE A. &minas, Coudersport. Prothonotary and Clerk of the Courts, THOMAS B. TYLER, Coudersport. Register and Recorder, ANDREW JACKSON, Coudersport. County Commissioners, WILLIS YOUNG, Ulysses, • HARRISON RosA, Whites Corners, .' HENRY NELSON, Wharton. County Auditors, HENRY L. Simons, Coudersport. HARRIS LYMAN, Roulette, JAMES H. WRIGHT, Sharon. Commissioners' Clerk, SAMUEL HAYeNS, Coudersport. Treasurer, HARRY ELLIS, Coudersport. County Surveyor, Z. F. ROBINSON. Harrison Valley. Superintendent of Common Schools, Joust B. PRADT, Coudersport Very Important Information. Dr. Junes, one of the most celebrated phy sicians in New-York, writes as fellows: Dr. CURTIS—Dear Sir:—Having witnessed the excellent effects of your HYGeAN♦ on IN HALING HTGEAN VAPOR •ND CHERRY Brno?. in a case of chronic Brenchitis, and being much in favor of counter-irritation in affec tions of the throat, bronchial tubes, and lungs, I can therefore cheerfully recommend .your Medicated Apparatut as being "the most con venient and edectnal mode of applying any thing of the kind I have ever seen. No doubt thousands of persons may be relieved, and many cured, by using your remedies. Yon are at liberty to. use this in any way you may think proper. .Respectfully, yours, &c., C. JOHNS,.M. D., No. SO9 Houston street, New-York. Prof. S. CENTER writes as follows : GENTLEMEN,-.1 have recently had occasion to! test your Cherry Syrup and Hygean Vapor in the case of chronic sore throat, that had re fused to yield to other forms of treatment, and the result has satisfied me, that, whatever may lto the composition of your preparation, it is no imposition, but an excellent remedy. I wish, for the sake of the afflicted, that it might be brought within the reach of all. Rev. Doctor Caszvnt writer r e , Nxw-Youx, ov. 15, I 4. Dear Sir:—l think highly f Dr. D rtis's Hygeana, as a remedy . to ages o tho throat and lungs. Having some oppor tunity to test its efficacy, I convinced that it is a - moat excellent m 'ti ne , both the Syrup and the inhaling app • don to the chest. The Hygeana is for sale . y D. W. SPRICIN, Coudersport. . . • T. 37. Gm Putnanit Monthly, Ir asatimMg the publication of POTNAll'el MONTHLT, it is only 'necessary for us to refer to the special notice issued, with our hearty approval, upon the first of April, by the late publishers. The Magazine will aim at greater. excellence in the &Section hitherto pursued; and, without being a partisan, will hold de cided opinions, and will treat ill public .ques tions from a humane and truly rational point of yiew. • In all the other varied 'departments of a Monthly Magazine, it will. hope to amuse, instruct, and - benefit; to criticise generously bntjustly; and to attract to its pages, as it has already done, the contributions of able men in every walk of Literature, Science, and Art. The past volumes are the best assurance that nothing ufiensive to the purest morality, and no wanton attack upon honest conviction, will ever find a place in the Magazine. All communications should he addressed to Dix EDWARDS, Publishers of Putnam's Monthly, 10 Park Place, New York. MAY. CONTENTS. The Last Word of Geology. ' • _Oliver Besselin. The Compensation Office. - The Alps. The Dames of Virginia. The Turks Two Hundred Years Ago The Night Chase. Only a Pebble. • The Count De Cagliostio. The Challenge. The National Academy of Design. The Birth-place of Mozart. A cruise in the Flying Dutchman. The Beasts of the Prairies, America for the Americans. Twice Married (Continued.) Editorial Notes. I: Literature-1. American. 2: Reprints. U. Fine Arts 111. Music. IV. Drama. TERMS Twenty-five cents per number, or $3 per annum. Clubs, of five or more, supplied at $2. Specimen numbers furnished, said Übe ral terms given to agents and canvassers. DIX & EDWARDS, 10 Park Place. "For Truth--our Country, and the Slave." OUR WORLD. 603 Pages, 12m0., 10 Illustrations, Price $1.25 THAT - this exciting story should arouse the LIVELIEST INTEREST AND DEEPEST FEELING, IS natural and obvitius—it relates to THE GREAT QUESTION which so deeply engrosses the minds and hearts of all our people. Its character, inci dents, and scenes, are all OUR OWN, AND OF OUR TIME. It is vividly and effectively written; and the Truth of History and the Charms of Romance render its pages at once . . - CAPTIVATING AND CONVINCING. It shows the wrongs and cruelties inflicted upon THREE MILLION SLAVES ! , — the . bondage in which' the Slave-power • ttempts to hold TWENTY MILLION FREEMEN • "As a literary work, it is superior to Uncle Tom's Cabin. It will excite, first, attention, and then admiration throughout - the country, and' take its place at the head of all recently published books." [Buffalo Express. "We have never read a fictitious story Which so completely engrossed one's atten tion from commencement to close." • [Boston Evening Gazette. -Car For sale by all Booksellers. *„'' Copies sent by Mail, Postage Prepaid, on receipt of price. MILLER, ORTON, & MULLIGAN, Publishers, 25 Park Row, New York, and 107 Genesee-st, Auburn. 50 2t TO THE PUBLIC. TAICE NOTICE, that I intend to apply to ills Excellency, Gov. Pollock, for the pardon of my son, Wm. Alonzo Crosby, who was convicted of Forgery in this county at the last September session. WM. CROSBY. Couderspor-, Pa., April 23, 1855. ANEW supply of Scum:a, BOOKS, Paper, Pens, etc., of every kind enquired Lorin this part of the country, just received . and for sale at the JOURNAL BOOK—STORE. Bounty Land, THE uudersigned will give particu lar attention to the procuring of Bounty Laud for all those ' entitled thereto under the late or any previous Act of Congress, A. G. OLMSTED. • Coudersport, Pa., March 15, 1855. 7-43.6 m Auditor's Notice. NOTICE is hereby given that the Auditor appointed by the Court to make distribu tion of the proceeds of the moneys arising from the sale of real estate in the case of Aaron Rice vs. John Pye and. Martin RyaMNo. 47 Feb. Term, 1853, will attend to the duties of his appointment at the Prothonottuy's Office, iu Coudersport, on the 11th day of April next, at one o'clock P. M., when all persons inter interested may attend if they think proper. T. 13. TYLER, Auditor. 44-at March 22, 1855 Maearthue's Liniment. The beat Liniment in the World I Prepared by A: Macaartrue, M. D.. This article may be relied upon as.being a sure cure for sprains, Bruises, Cramps, Swellings, Rheumatism, Frozen Limbs, Con traction of the .Muscles, Croup, Quinsy, 'Chilblains, Affections of the Spine, Nervous Diseases, Weakness, and for Burns if applied immediately, Eruptions of tbo Skin, Chapped Hands, Cuts or Sores, and effectually coun teracts any team:dation. And an effectual remedy for Horses acid Cattle, in the cute of the tollowing diseases, viz: Sprains, Bruises, Swellings,. Sp:wins, lingbones, Fresh Wounds, Sweeney, Wind . t Labieness, Cracked Heels, Scratches, or Grease, and Galls of all kinds Occasioned by the basins& For sale by N EW a.uival of AyrereFeVAlt...i•R-,s CLOVER SEED, and all kinds of Garden Seed, for sale at SPENCER'S. THE beat time. rai li ng tea and 6d sugar is at OLMSTED% HONEY. --A good quality of honey for sale at - C. SMITH'S . TEAS, fresk vid:chesp, al •• • . , BRUCE'S NEW-YORK TYPE .FOUN DRY, established in 1813, has now on hand, ready for immediate dcliFeiy, in fonts to suit purchasers, . 100.000 lb. Roman Type anew cut, 50,000 " Fancy Type, 10,000 " Scripts of various stylet. .5,000 " Germans, 5,000 " Ornaments in great variety, 5;000 " Borders, 30,000 feet Brass and Type Metal Rules, and all the novelties in the business. All the above Types are .cast by steam power, of the new metal' peculiar to this foun dry, and which is certainly superior to any ever used before in any part of the world. The unequalled rapidity in. the process -of casting, enables me to sell these more durable types at the prices of ordinary types, either on credit or for cash. - Presses, Wood Type, and all other Printing Materials, except paper and Cards, (which have no fixed quality or price,) furnished at manufacturers' prices. The latest Specimen Book of the Foundry is freely given to aliprinting offices, on the re ceipt of Idly cents to prepay postage. IV' Printers of newspapers who choose to publish this adveitisement, including this note, three times before the first day of July, 1855, and forward me one of the papers, will be allowed their bills at the time of purchasing five .times the amount of my manufactures. New:York, Feb. 12,1855. • Address, GEO. BRUCE, 13 Chambers-st., New-York- 1133 Coudersport Academy. THE Spring Term of this institution will commence on Monday, March 5, 1855. and continue eleven weeks. " Terms. Elementary branches—Orthography, Geography, Arithmetic, Physiology, $3.00 Higher Arithmitic, First Lessons in Algebra, and English Grammar; 3 50 Higher English branches, Philosophy, Astronomy, Algebra, Vic., 5.00 Higher Mathematics and the Languages, 6.00 Drawing, extra, 1.50 Instruction on the . Piano Forte, extra,...10.00 Use of instrument, 300 Vocal musicfree of charge. Pre-payment of all bills strictly required. ra' Either higher. class of studies will in chide any or all the lower classes. The subscriber takes this occasion to ex press his thanks to the people of Potter and of other sections for their • liberal support dtrring the past year, and.to assure them that no pains will be spared in the future that may be required to make this school an institution worthy of the entire confidence and support of all who desire a sound rudimental as well as a thorough mathematical and classical edu cation. J. BLOOSII..NGDALE, Principal: The'undersigned Officers and Trustees of the Coudersport Academy ate moved by,a sense of official and personal duty, to call the. attention of the public, and of the . people of our county in particular, to, the rising and useful character of this institution of learning. When we invited the present worthy Prim'. pal to the post he occupies, we found the Acad emy depressed and declining. We submitted its organization and other most onerous affairs to his discretion and management; and our experience enables us with insreased confi dence to assure parents and guardians that be hal proved faithful, efficient, utid practical— just such an instructor es this community needs. WHEREAS, the Hon. Robert G.,White, President Judge, and the Hon. O. A. Lewis and Joseph Mann, Esqs., Associate Judges of-the Courts of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail Delivery, Quarter Sessions of the Peace, Orphan's Court and Court of Common Pleas for the County 0 - Totter, have issued their precept, bearing _d to the 23d day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifty four, and to me directed, for holding 'a" Court of Oyer and Terminer and General Jail De livery, Quarter Sessions of the Peace, Orphans' Court, and . Court of Common Pleas, in the Borough of Coudersport, on MONDAY, the 18th day of June next, and to continue one weet. Notice is therefore hereby given to the Cor oners, Justices of the Peace, and Constables within the county, that they be then and there in their proper persons, at 10 o'clock, A. M., of said day, with their rolls, records, inquisi tiOnsTexammations, and other remembrances, to do those things which to their offices ap pertain to be done. And those who are bound by their recognizances, to prosecute against the prisoners that are or shall be in the jail of the said county of Potter, are to be then and there to prosecute against them as will be just. Dated at Coudersport, Feb: 24th, 1855, and the 79th year of the Independence of the United States of America. P. A. STEBBINS, Sheriff For Trial in the Court of Common Pleas of Potter County at rune Term, 1855. Curtis vs. Dickinson Admin'st'r of Adams, " Butts. Harrison use of Garrett Hall. Ayres . " Bell. Perry - - " Hill and Hill. Carson " Johnson. Brown &Co. use of i „ Rooks. Simpson, Abby " Bronson and Steele Jones " Jones. Ross " Jordan. ' - Williams " Reant. Benson • " Carrier, et. al. For Admirest'rof Fox, " Dwight. Cady . " Dickinson. THOS. B. TYLER, Proth'y PROTHON/STAILY'S OFFICE, / Coudersport, April 26, 1853. IDEPORTAN'r TO LUMBER " LIMN: • SKINNER'S PATENT SHINGLE-MACHINE. THE undersigned, agent for the Patentee in Potter and the .adjoining counties 'of Pennsylvania and New-York, would respeet fully, call the attention of Lumbermen ir..d otherito this labor-saving' machine, patented Nov., 1851, and now in successful operation in various parts of the United States. This machine will rive and shave from one to two thousand shingles per hour, and will work hemlock equally as well as pine, the practical working of which can be seen at Geneleis Fork, where one is now in operation: Any information respecting the same will be given by addressing the subscriber, . 0.. CHAMBERLAIN. Ellisburg, Pa.,.March 22, 1855. • ' D. NV. SPENCER. 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